Blessed are those who find wisdom, those who gain understanding, for she is more profitable than silver and yields better returns than gold. —Prov 3:13-14

Just Living

An experiment of faith in action. This seven-part small group study seeks to help us live more responsibly in everything from personal and family finances to day-to-day practices. In the words of the Apostle Paul, it is an attempt to 'conform no longer to the present pattern of the world’ (Romans 12:2).

It suggests commitments that can be made personally or as a household or family, in the areas of consumption, work and leisure, giving, environment, debt, and investments.

An oldie but a goodie. This classic booklet of 10 studies challenges us to simplify our lives on behalf of the poor and choose more satisfying life principles. With global issues in mind, this booklet gives the ‘why’ and ‘how’ of living simply, freeing up time and money for causes you believe in.

A lifestyle revolution for global citizens. Ruth Valerio shows us how, by making small changes, we can learn the secret of a life that is fair and fulfilling. In simple five to six-page chapters, Ruth unpacks the interconnectedness of our actions and the world. “B is for Bananas”, looks at global trade and fair trade.“I is for Investments” shows how to invest away from warfare, and fossil fuels.

In each very short chapter you are given simple steps to take. Join us and study this book as a group.

Restore

This resource provides a quick overview of our work responding to and preparing for natural disasters. As global weather patterns become increasingly extreme, our work in this sector is growing ever more important.

Restoring Hope is a study for individuals or groups interested in the ‘humanitarian’ work that organisations like Tearfund do. Covering disasters, conflict situations and peace-making, it will also challenge you to personally act.

The last three years have been the hottest on record. In this resource we explain some of the life-threatening impacts of climate change on poorer countries that contributed least to the problem. This includes the loss of land and crops, the spread of heat-related diseases, and water shortages. We also show how you can help make changes to prevent the worst effects.

The biggest humanitarian disaster of many of our lifetimes, the Syrian conflict is hugely complex and offers no simple solutions. This resource provides a brief explanation of the history of the conflict, explores the ongoing human cost of the War, and explains the work that Tearfund is doing and how you can help.

No longer a passing spike, the refugee crisis is a new normal. New Zealand accepts 1000 refugees a year and each family needs community support. Find out how your family or your church can support new arrivals.

Refugees and ‘internally displaced persons’ flee from conflict, persecution, drought and increasingly from the effects of climate change. Where are they from, what’s driving the increase refugees and what can we do? This insight introduces you to these issues.

The purpose of this resource on psychosocial support (PSS) is to provide the reader with a brief introduction to basic psychosocial issues post-disaster and to point the reader to useful post disaster PSS resources.

Protect

Slavery predates human records and was institutionalised in cultures around the world from the earliest days of humanity. Over time though, it has been recognised that slavery breaches, and is an abuse of basic human rights. Modern understandings of it stem specifically from the evolution and eventual abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.

Ask us for one – or 10 – FREE copies of our introductory group study guide on the horrid evil that is human trafficking and slavery. The booklet features five studies that show individuals and groups the facts of modern slavery, the history of abolition, and what two of Tearfund’s partner organisations who work on the frontline are doing.

It’s all wrapped in Biblical principles and a framework for understanding it, and concludes with what we can all do about it.

The poverty cycle can best be defined as the set of factors or events by which poverty, once started, is likely to continue unless there is outside intervention. In these three studies, we examine the causes of global poverty, how to use our voices and advocate for the poor, and how to respond to poverty in a biblical way.

Our exciting new cookbook has recipes all 75 cents or less per helping. It’s packed full of creative dishes from top Kiwi chefs including Ray McVinnie, Annabel Langbein, Julie Le Clerc, Simon Gault, Nadia Lim, and Dr. Libby Weaver. This book is the ultimate guide to surviving Live Below the Line, but also makes a great cookbook any time of year for those who want to eat healthy and save money.

All profits from the sale of One Helping, goes to support Tearfund's work of rehabilitating and rescuing victims of human trafficking in Southeast Asia.

Nourish

Did you know that more people have access to cell phones than adequate sanitation? This resource provides a brief overview of Tearfund’s Nourish sector, which addresses water and health. We look at the Bible’s discussions of basic needs, and explore the ways you can help in this area.

Empower

We believe people have a right to make a living to provide for themselves and their family, so we empower them to do so. By providing communities with the resources and education to become self-supporting, we enable them to find local, long-term solutions to poverty. This booklet shares our conviction about how important this work is and the approaches we use to empower communities.

This cause is focussed around empowering people to help themselves, and one of the key ways we do this is through encouraging enterprise. This resource provides a brief overview of our work in this area, and explains how our Self-Help-Groups are empowering people and communities in the some of the world’s poorest areas.

Despite producing more than enough food to feed the world’s population, starvation and poor nutrition remain major issues across the developing world. This resource explores some of the systemic factors that drive food insecurity, and how we can challenge these issues.

We face the paradox of needing to produce more food to respond to the world’s ever growing population, while also decreasing our carbon emissions. This resource discusses Climate Smart Agriculture, and the steps that we can take to produce food more efficiently and more sustainably.

This workshop explores how justice is a central theme in the Gospel.

The gospel is not just about life after death. It can only be understood if we see that God is also concerned with justice here and now. We look at Jesus’ own practice and ask what it means to follow him in the light of this. We’ll be challenged to uncover our own hearts for fighting injustice and find some ways to get started. The workshop will be interactive and exploratory; come with your mind and heart open.

How can we best approach the question of global inequalities and poverty in the developing world?

After 70 years of aid, what has been achieved, what mistakes have happened, and where is hope? Tearfund will take you on a journey through the history of ‘development’ and the ideas that have driven it, while reflecting on the way poorer countries have been perceived and the role of Christian theology of mission in development.

Want your church to reach your community? Feel paralysed at the thought of it? Yeah, we understand.

Tearfund now offers a great tool to help churches walk towards people in their own locale. Discovery is an interactive process that helps churches learn the spiritual foundations for community development, identifies their gifts and talents, and the problems and needs in the community. In fun easy steps that anyone can learn, you discover how to research, develop, grow and monitor a community outreach.